Career Opportunity | Now Accepting Applications for a Re-entry Residency Position in Interior Health!

Career Opportunity | Now Accepting Applications for a Re-entry Residency Position in Interior Health!

The UBC Department of Psychiatry will be funded yearly for 1 Re-entry Residency Position in Psychiatry in the Interior going forward.

This re-entry residency position comes with a 3-year Return of Service (ROS) contract with the Ministry of Health. This year, the ROS will be completed in the Interior Health Authority in British Columbia.

The application deadline for 2024/2025 is January 1st, 2024. Please review the full posting for this position for additional information regarding eligibility requirements and the application process.

For full details on the ROS commitment, please see the re-entry ROS contract templates and policy available on the Ministry of Health’s Re-entry webpage. Training for the Interior ROS position will occur in the Interior Psychiatry PGE Track for PGY2 and 3 with years 4 and 5 being flexible for training opportunities anywhere in the province, in Canada and even abroad if approved.

Liisa Galea

You are Invited: MAiD and Mental Disorders:  How did we get here? | Thursday November 9 @ 5:30pm

You are invited to attend an in-person / virutal talk on MAiD and Mental Disorders:  How did we get here? on Thursday November 9th, 2023 at 5:30pm. This talk will be presented by Sandra Martin, an award-winning journalist and a contributing writer for The Globe and Mail and the author of the critically acclaimed national bestseller, A Good Death: Making the Most of Our Final Choices

In-person: Diamond Health Care Centre, Vancouver. DHCC 1020 (lobby level)
Zoom: https://ubc.zoom.us/join
Meeting ID: 917-8725-3544
Passcode: 253544


Sandra Martin, an award-winning journalist and a contributing writer for The Globe and Mail, is the author of the critically acclaimed national bestseller, A Good Death: Making the Most of Our Final Choices.  Winner of the B.C. National Non-Fiction Award and a finalist for both the Dafoe Prize and the Donner Prize in Public Policy, A Good Death was named one of the best books of 2016 by The Globe and Mail, the CBC and several other media outlets. Margaret Atwood has called A Good Death “a timely and deeply felt account of assisted dying:  the histories, the issues” and included it on her list of best books about death and dying. 

A Good Death was published in a revised paperback edition in 2017 with a new chapter on Bill C-14, Canada’s Medical Assistance in Dying law (MAID). She has written about her ongoing MAiD research in The Globe and Mail and other publications. Including The Literary Review of Canada. Her essay, Death of an Author: the weirdest man I never met, about MAiD activist John Hofsess was a finalist for a national magazine award in 2023.

She has won two National Magazine Awards, several honourable mentions, the Fiona Mee Award for literary journalism, and a National Newspaper Award nomination for feature writing. As a journalist for The Globe and Mail, she was known for her books and arts coverage and especially for her perceptive, deeply researched and vividly written obituaries.  Many of them formed the basis of her essays on the history, culture and future of obituaries in her book, Working the Dead Beat: 50 lives that changed Canada.  Long-listed for the Charles Taylor Prize and named a Globe one hundred book for 2012, it was published in paperback under the title Great Canadian Lives:  A Cultural History of Modern Canada Through the Art of the Obit.   

Her public policy initiatives about race and gender in the workplace won the Atkinson Fellowship in Public Policy from The Toronto Star. She has also been awarded a Canadian Journalism Fellowship to study at the University of Toronto, named the Pelham Edgar lecturer at Victoria College, and awarded The Harvey Southam Lectureship in Creative non-fiction at the University of Victoria.

As a literary journalist, Martin edited the Oberon Best Short Stories and Coming Attractions anthologies with writer David Helwig, bringing writers such as Rohinton Mistry, Bonnie Burnard and Frances Itani to a wider audience.

As a wide-ranging non-fiction writer, she is the co-author of three books, including Rupert Brooke in Canada and Card Tricks: Bankers, Boomers and the Explosion of Plastic Credit, which was short-listed for the Canadian Business Book Award in 1993. She has written for most magazines (past and present) in this country including Toronto Life, The Walrus, Saturday Night and Queen’s Quarterly.

As a memoirist, she conceived, commissioned and edited The First Man in My Life: Daughters Write About Their Fathers, a best-selling anthology of personal narratives about one of our most complicated and least explored relationships. She also contributed the essay, “Visitation Rights,” to the anthology. 

Among other memoir essays, she contributed “Snapshots” to the second volume of Dropped Threads, “Travels in The New South Africa” to Why Are You Telling Me This: Eleven Acts of Intimate Journalism, “Visitation Rights” and “Road Trips” to Great Expectations: Twenty-Four True Stories About Childbirth.

Martin is currently working on a book about aging.

SAVE THE DATE! UBC Department of Psychiatry Festive Celebration | Friday December 15th @ The Arbutus Club

Please mark your calendars for the UBC Psychiatry Festive Celebration to take place on Friday December 15th at 5:30pm at The Arbutus Club! Stay tuned for more details and an RSVP request to follow in the coming weeks.

To save this in your Outlook calendar, click on the link and remember to click “Save & Close.” If you use another calendar, please save the date manually.

All Department members are invited, including faculty, staff, fellows, students, residents and volunteers, so we hope you will join us at our annual end-of-the-year celebration!

Call for Nominations: Killam Teaching Prizes 2024 | Deadline: Feb 1, 2024, 12:00pm

** Sent on behalf of Dr. Sophia Frangou, Associate Head – Research, UBC Department of Psychiatry**

Dear UBC Psychiatry Faculty,

Killam Teaching Prizes 2024

Faculty of Medicine Internal Deadline:Thursday, February 1, 2024 12:00pm

UBC Killam Teaching Prizes are UBC’s most prestigious teaching awards. The UBC Killam Teaching Prizes recognize excellence in teaching in the medical and science undergraduate programs, residency programs, school and graduate programs within the Faculty of Medicine. The Prizes are awarded annually, and are supported by the UBC Killam Endowment Fund.

Overview | Nomination Form | Previous Recipients

Please contact Ms. Laura Gillis, Office of the Vice Dean, Education, at laura.gillis@ubc.ca if you have any questions at all.

Sincerely,

Dr. Sophia Frangou, MD, Ph.D., FRCPsych, FRCPC
President’s Excellence Chair in Brain Health
Associate Head – Research
Professor of Psychiatry

I acknowledge, with gratitude, that I live and work on the traditional, ancestral, and unceded territory of the xwməθkwəy̓əm (Musqueam), Skwxwú7mesh (Squamish), and Səl̓ílwətaʔ/Selilwitulh (Tsleil- Waututh) Nations.

ACTION REQUIRED: Psychiatry IT – File Share Migration

PSYCHIATRY IT – FILE SHARE MIGRATION

WHY is it happening: Psych IT will be migrating mapped drive shares I: M: N: P: U: V: Y: to a new file server.


WHEN is it happening: 5:00 PM on Friday October 6 till 5:00 PM on Monday October 9

WHO it will affect: For all supported computers on our Psychiatry AD network (Computer joined to our AD Domain with a computer name PSYTnnnn).

WHAT you need to do:

  1. LOG OUT from your Windows account after saving and closing all documents you have opened from the share drive by 5:00 PM on Friday October 6.
  2. DO NOT MAKE ANY CHANGES to any files during the migration period from 5:00 PM on Friday October 6 till 5:00 PM on Monday October 9.
  3. REBOOT YOUR COMPUTER when returning to work on Tuesday.
  4. Once the reboot is complete, login and your share access should be automatically updated. Test by opening commonly accessed shared files.

If you have any issues, please kindly email psychiatry.it@ubc.ca or call us at 604-827-5695 (please leave a message if we are on another call).

Sincerely,

Simon Chong
Computer Systems Manager
UBC Department of Psychiatry

FRAMES OF MIND Mental Health Film Series | Wednesday October 18 @ 7:00pm | The Cinematheque

A monthly film series promoting professional and community education on issues pertaining to mental health and illness. Presented by The Cinematheque and the Institute of Mental Health, UBC Department of Psychiatry. Screenings are generally held on the third Wednesday of each month at The Cinematheque, 1131 Howe St, Vancouver, BC.

All My Puny Sorrows

Canada 2021 (103min DCP)
Director: Michael McGowan
Wednesday October 18th @ 7:00pm
The Cinematheque (1131 Howe St)

Co-sponsored by the Canadian Psychiatric Association

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Film Description

Based on the novel by preeminent Canadian author Miriam Toews, All My Puny Sorrows is a family drama about two sisters leading very different lives. Yoli (Alison Pill), a struggling writer, and Elf (Sarah Gadon), a successful concert pianist, are each uniquely impacted by the suicide of their father, a Mennonite patriarch. Their collective trauma reaches a critical point when Elf is hospitalized for a suicide attempt of her own. While Yoli challenges her sister’s wish to die, a sense of profound empathy, mutual respect, and deep love for one another shines through their joyful banter full of literary references and wry humour. Drawing on Toews’s real-life experience, the film raises the important and contentious issue—soon to be legal in Canada—of Medical Assistance in Dying (MAiD) for individuals whose sole underlying medical condition is a mental illness.

“Measured and thoughtful … Where many films would use this [premise] as a springboard for a tedious moral treatise on a hot-button issue, All My Puny Sorrows keeps the focus commendably and non-judgmentally personal.” — Guy Lodge, Variety

“I love this movie … What [Michael McGowan] pulls off here is a miracle of tone … Yoli, Elf, and Lottie each need something, and Pill, Gadon, and Winningham each has precisely that thing to give.” — Johanna Schneller, The Globe and Mail


Post-screening Discussion:

Welcoming remarks by Dr. Lakshmi N. Yatham, Professor & Head, Department of Psychiatry, University of British Columbia

Post-screening discussion with Dr. Derryck Smith and Dr. Tyler Black, facilitated by Dr. Alison Freeland. Moderated by Dr. Harry Karlinsky, Clinical Professor, Department of Psychiatry, University of British Columbia

About the Panel:

Dr. Lakshmi N. Yatham is a Professor and Head of the UBC Department of Psychiatry, and is also Director of the UBC Institute of Mental Health.

Dr. Alison Freeland is Board Chair of the Canadian Psychiatric Association, Vice President of Education, Academic Affairs and Patient Experience at Trillium Health Partners, and Associate Dean, Mississauga Campus, at the Temerty Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto. The focus of her clinical work is the care of people with serious mental illness and substance use disorders.

Dr. Derryck Smith has been an advocate for Medical Assistance in Dying (MAiD) since the Sue Rodriguez case in 1994. He has testified in the Carter case 2014 and to parliament on Bills C-14 and C-7. He is a past board member of Dying with Dignity Canada and the World Federation of Right to Die Societies. He is an active member of the Canadian Psychiatric Association Committee on MAiD.

Dr. Tyler Black is a child and adolescent psychiatrist who works both at the University of British Columbia and BC Children’s Hospital, primarily in urgent and emergency cases. He is the author of the ASARI, a leading practice for suicide risk documentation and the co-author of HEARTSMAP, a psychosocial assessment tool for triaging health and social needs, as well as the co-author of the Clinical Handbook of Psychotropic Medications for Children and Adolescents. He has a primary research and teaching interest in suicide and suicidology, and has testified before both the House of Commons as well as the Canadian Senate regarding medical assistance in dying. He maintains a newsletter on suicidology at suicidology.substack.com.

Dr. Harry Karlinsky, the Series Director of Frames of Mind and a Clinical Professor in the UBC Department of Psychiatry, has a longstanding commitment to professional and public education. He has presented nationally and internationally on topics ranging from Alzheimer’s disease to information technology to narrative medicine to PTSD and to the use of films in health care education.


Want to be a regular at Frames of Mind screenings on the third Wednesday of every month? Subscribe to the email list and be the first in line for tickets!

Updated Public Health Measures – Medical Mask Wearing Requirement Effective October 3, 2023

On Thursday, September 28, the Government of B.C. announced updated public health measures in health-care facilities to protect patients, residents in long-term care facilities, health-care workers and people during respiratory illness season.

To increase protections in health-care facilities in B.C., medical mask wearing will be required by all health-care workers, volunteers, contractors and visitors in patient care areas (including UBC faculty, staff and learners who operate in the mentioned areas) starting October 3. Health care facilities include:

  • All health authority hospitals and clinical settings
  • Long-term care facilities
  • Seniors assisted living settings
  • Private hospitals
  • Provincial mental health facilities

A patient care area is any area within a health care facility (including a contracted facility), hallway or lobby, which is accessible to patients, residents in long-term care facilities or clients who are there to access care or services. This includes any other location where care is provided (such as at home and community care locations), but does not include administrative areas or private staff offices that are not generally accessed by patients, residents or clients. Long-term care visitors will be required to wear a medical mask when they are in common areas of the home and when participating in indoor events, gatherings, activities in communal areas of the care home or residence.

Ambassadors will be located at the entrances to health-care facilities to support screening for symptoms of respiratory illnesses, hand out medical masks, and ensure people clean their hands before entering.

For all UBC Faculty of Medicine learners, please contact your respective program if you have any questions. For more information visit the UBC’s Safety & Risk Services website. Additional questions can be directed to fom.safety@ubc.ca

Thank you for your ongoing commitment to ensuring the health and safety of our communities.

Sincerely,

Roger Y.M. Wong, CM, BMSc, MD, FRCPC, FACP, FCAHS, FCGS 
Vice Dean, Education
Clinical Professor, Division of Geriatric Medicine
Faculty of Medicine
The University of British Columbia

Jennifer Golinski  (She, Her, Hers)
Senior Director, Education Programs and Services
UBC Faculty of Medicine | Office of the Vice Dean, Education
The University of British Columbia | Vancouver Campus | Musqueam Traditional Territory
UBC Faculty of Medicine – Transforming health for everyone

Psychiatry IT: Memos & Updates | September 2023

Multiple Vulnerabilities in Apple Products Discovered by Researchers, September 27, 2023

Latest security research found exploits that could enable remote access to Apple devices with outdated software which can allow attackers to install programs; view, change, or delete data; or create new accounts with full user rights.

RECOMMENDATIONS:

  • Please ensure your Apple devices are running the latest software.
  • To check if you’re on the latest update: Go to Settings > General > Software Update.
  • As of Sept 28 the latest version of Apple software listed below:
    • iOS & iPadOS: 17.0.2
    • MacOS: Venture 13.6 or Sonoma 14

For more additional information go to: https://support.apple.com/en-ca/HT201222


Renewing Your Adobe Acrobat or Adobe Creative Cloud UBC License Subscriptions

Below is a legitamate email from noreply@kivuto.com to remind you to renew your Adobe Acrobat or Adobe Creative Cloud UBC License Subscriptions in order to keep your Adobe software licensed and running.

Please follow the link within the email, login with your CWL (Campus Wide Logon) credentials to purchase and renew the Adobe license.

If you have any questions, please call 604.827.5695 (Psychiatry IT Main Support phone line) or email psychiatry.it@ubc.ca (Psychiatry IT Main Support email address)

Sincerely,

Simon Chong

Computer Systems Manager
Medicine | Psychiatry | Psychiatry IT
The University of British Columbia | Vancouver Campus | Musqueam Traditional Territory
2C1 – 2255 Wesbrook Mall | Vancouver British Columbia | V6T 2A1 Canada
psychiatry.it@ubc.ca 
http://psychiatry.ubc.ca

The UBC Department of Psychiatry Administration Office respectfully acknowledges the land on which we live, work and play is the traditional, ancestral, and unceded territories of the Coast Salish Peoples, the xʷməθkʷəy̓əm (Musqueam), Skwxwú7mesh (Squamish), and Səlilwətaɬ (Tsleil-waututh).

Appointment of Dr. Ashley Miller as Postgraduate CAP Subspecialty Program Director

Dear colleagues,

As the recruitment process for the position of Postgraduate Child & Adolescent Psychiatry (CAP) Subspecialty Program Director has concluded, we are delighted to announce that Dr. Ashley Miller has been appointed to this role for a three-year term, from October 1, 2023 to September 30, 2026.

Broadly, as CAP Subspecialty Program Director Dr. Miller will be responsible for the overall conduct and evaluation of the Postgraduate CAP Subspecialty Program, ensuring that the Competence by Design (CBD) curriculum in the CAP Program continues to fully meet the RCPSC standards of accreditation.  Her duties will include facilitating regular review and updating of the Program’s overarching training goals based on the CanMEDs competencies, and maintaining the high quality of CAP subspecialty education in Vancouver and across our distributed training sites. Dr. Miller has served as the PGE Site Director at BCCH since 2018 and will be stepping down from this appointment in order to assume her new role in the Department.

A child psychiatrist at BC Children’s Hospital (BCCH) since 2007, Dr. Miller was appointed to the UBC Department of Psychiatry as a Clinical Instructor in May 2008, and was subsequently promoted to Clinical Assistant Professor in 2012 and to Clinical Associate Professor in 2020. In addition to her current role, Dr. Miller has served as co-coordinator and supervisor for both the UBC Resident Family Therapy Program and the UBC Resident Interpersonal Psychotherapy Course, for which she redesigned the curricula in 2012 and 2018. She was the recipient of a UBC Psychiatry Residents Association Award for Excellence in PGE Clinical Teaching in 2020, and recently published a book titled What to Say to Kids When Nothing Seems to Work: A Practical Guide for Parents and Caregivers.

Please join us in warmly welcoming Dr. Miller to this key leadership role in the Postgraduate program. As well, we wish to once again thank the outgoing Program Director Dr. Jennifer Russel for her dedication and many significant contributions over the last two years.

Sincerely,

Dr. Lynn Raymond, Professor and Acting Head on behalf of Dr. L. Yatham, UBC Department of Psychiatry
Dr. Jordan Cohen, Associate Head, PGE & CPD, UBC Department of Psychiatry

The UBC Department of Psychiatry Administration Office respectfully acknowledges the land on which we live, work and play is the traditional, ancestral, and unceded territories of the Coast Salish Peoples, the xʷməθkʷəy̓əm (Musqueam), Skwxwú7mesh (Squamish), and Səlilwətaɬ (Tsleil-waututh).